Copy and paste this ASCII art on your Facebook wall if you're not embarrassed about being a Bigfooter. This is Bigfoot Tracks ASCII art so cool. All your Facebook friends will think you're awesome if you paste this on your wall ...

ASCII-graffiti! Using an Ascii Arena logo by Spot, I cut out stencils from pizza boxes for the characters / \ ( ) | _ and sprayed this. Character by character. In freezing cold Götlabörj City. Observed by sceptical writers with knives, yo.

2 channel, the biggest forum in Japan, is changing its rules so users have started migrating to Reddit. Hopefullt that means more Japanese ASCII art like these, taken from a Google-translate powered thread here.

When writers choose a font, they generally do so because of the character it imparts to their text. But for coders it's the opposite: they want a font that is generally characterless, so as not to obfuscate the massive bodies of code. Consequently, most coders prefer retro-style monospaced fonts, where each character takes up the exact same amount of horizontal space. Because a single typo can mess everything up, these simple, monospaced fonts make code a lot easier to read. They also make it easy for coders to do things like format discrete columns in their code for comments on the right side of a page.

Laura Brown's insight:

Why do we use fonts not designed for readers? Fancy fonts are nice for creating images with text or using as titles and headers. But for reading content it seems a better reading font is required. Think about the fonts book publishers have been using for generations of books and people.

DragonFly BSD is a free and open source Unix-like operating system created as a fork of FreeBSD 4.8. Matthew Dillon, an Amiga developer in the late 1980s and early 1990s and a FreeBSD developer between 1994 and 2003, began work on DragonFly BSD in June 2003 and announced it on the FreeBSD mailing lists on 16 July 2003.[3]

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